This week’s fresh listings:
This page is to be updated every
Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin,
Medal & Token listings for that particular week.
The more observant of you may have realised that I no
longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page.
All for sale coins can be found via the category grid on the front
page. Most sold coins are now accessible via a new link on that same
category grid.
Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com
for week commencing
WMH-9114
(F.LIM): Henry 1st Hammered Silver
Norman Penny - Choice Portrait. Quadrilateral on Cross Fleury, B.M.C. XV
type, Spink 1276. +EST[MVN]D:ON:LVND - £1,395
Provenance
ex
Spink
ex
Frank Limouze
WSC-9115:
Rare Scottish Alexander
III type VII Hammered Silver Penny. First coinage,
1250-80 but close to the very end of this period.
ANDREV:ON:R (Andrews) of Roxburgh. Spink 5047. The entire reign was prosperous, even though
Alexander succeeded his father at just seven years of age. The reign was cut short when Alexander rode
his horse off a cliff aged just 44 (the king, not the unfortunate horse). A rare coin but possibly trumped by the
grade. This type VII is the first I've
ever handled (along with the type VIII that I also have) in all the decades. £445
WMH-9116:
Edward 1st Hammered Silver
Penny. Rose on
breast - class 7a. £225
Provenance
ex
Northern collection, purchased...
ex
Sovereign Rarities (£200)
WTH-9117:
Extremely Rare Elizabeth
1st Hammered Shilling. Initial mark Martlet, second issue,
1560-61. What makes this a very
rare coin indeed is a combination of grade and the fact that this coin is a
contemporary counterfeit. The base metal
core of the coin is evident where blistering over the centuries has occurred,
as well as on the edge. This would have
been laminated with a decent silver plating, but
obviously the combined metal value would have been much lower than an actual
shilling, which is where the counterfeiter would have made his money. I've seen two or three of these over the
years and without exception, the extant silver plate is virtually non-existant. This coin
retains 98% of the original silvering.
Better still is the die with which they struck the prepared blank to
create the actual coin. Clearly this
would have been a non-official, hand-made die, copying the official 3C bust,
but the workmanship is truly outstanding - astonishing, in fact. This would fool many people today, bar the
base metal blisters, and would surely have fooled everyone back in the
day! I have never seen the like before,
both in the quality of the die used and also in the almost unbelievable grade
of the coin, not just in the 1560's, when this coin would have hit the streets
of £365